If you like ^^^^^ then you might like #####

Figured I'd start another suggestion/recommendation topic, but with a bit of a twist of thinking.

This topic will be a place to compare different books or series that you have read with series or books that explore similar themes or tropes of the fantasy genre.

I guess the best way to describe what the purpose of this topic is is to give a few examples.

If you like the other-wordly magic, book-within-a book type story of The Little Country by Charles de Lint, you might like the dark, subtle magic of a book-within-a-bookness of Jonathan Carroll's Land of Laughs.

If you enjoyed Orson Scott Card's magic-ing and re-imagining of early America in The Tales of Alvin Maker you might like J. Gregory Keyes' Age of Unreason. Both series take an interesting look at the early days of America and employ an intersting dichotomy of good v. evil

So, let's see what everybody else can come up with.

C'mon, be a bit more creative than if you like Brooks then try Feist!

One of the two books/series compared has to be fantasy though, other than that type away!

This is a tough one and a topic I generally avoid. First because I usually do not take recommendations. Secondly I find that while a person may love someone I also love, they turn around and adore someone I detest. Or vice versa. Not that eclecticism is not a good thing. Just that tastes can be so incredibly bizarre sometimes when looking at them from the outside.

But here goes.

If you like Melanie Rawn, you might want to try Joane Bertin's Last Dragonlord series. It was very similar yet not so in a way that you felt she was just copying.

If you like Guy Gavriel Kay, I suggest Patricia McKillip. You will not get the same type of story. But you will get rich prose and an approach to magic that is deft, sublte and masterful.

If you like Anne Bishop, you might want to try Jane Routley or Jacqualine Carey. Both
have a much more mature tone to them and the plotline is a bit more sensible and absorbing. Even if you did not like Anne Bishop, try these authors. I would also suggest Carey for those who like Tanith Lee, Storm Constantine, Clive Barker or Anne Rice.
Frankly I suggest that everyone like Carey as she incorporates so many fantasy traits I like in others' works and makes them all her own.

If you like George Martin, then you might like Melanie Rawn. Lots of politics and action, huge casts, the authors aren't afraid to kill of main characters, vividly imagined worlds, and great characters. Rawn may not be quite as epic as Martin, but she's equally enjoyable (IMHO )

Hey, Neil. Normal price for a novel here is between 6 and 8 pounds depending how 'fat' it is(!), but stuff via amazon is usually discounted, so it still only works out at about that, even once p&p is added. At these prices, the no. of bks i buy is pretty limited. Hell, for 8 pounds i can get a cinema ticket, drink, popcorn, and travel there and back! Tough choice, sometimes.

As for buying all 3, ummm......no 'fence, but, I'd rather pay for one, then pay for the others if i like it! (due to the above budgeting dilema). So GET THEM PUBLISHED HERE!!!!!

It's always difficult cause tastes differ.
So if you like the middle age setting and court intrigues I'd recommend Kate Elliott's Crown of Star series or Robin Hobb's Farseer.
If you're more interested in fighting and struggles I can recommend Sara Douglass' Battle Axe.
If you're more into the dark atmosphere I'd go for J. V. Jones' the Sword of Shadows.

If you like GRRM's A Song of Ice and Fire chances are you will enjoy Memory, Sorrow and Thorn by Tad Williams. In a couple of interviews, Martin acknowledged this series that helped inspire him to write ASOIF.

Erebus -
Just trying to work out where you got these books published? Being a fellow Aussie, I expected you would have an Australian publisher. Am I correct in assuming it is not? Are the prices on the website in US dollars?

If you enjoyed GRRM's "Song of Fire and Ice" you will also enjoy Steven Erikson's "Malazan Book of the Fallen" series. Both are on the darker side. Both authors do not hessitate to kill off main characters and both stores have magic systems that are unique. GRRM was my favorite author until i began to read Erikson's series. So far, the best series i have picked up.